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ttlktte'OFFICE: No. 13 Tonth Street. Thornton's" Building.. , f''"il' T - . - - iZ.i.. , it 1 ;' SATURDAY EVENING, JULY 17, 1869.DAILY. EDITIONJOHN H. OBERLY. & COIt A ITiUO.il ItlKKTltVC'.vmi't'It'S I1L0CK TO-NIMIT.The Oil in lr I'iiKoii llnllroiul I'mpnslllniito In- illm'iiNsril.On Monday next the voters of Cairowill voto on thu proposition to subscribe$100,000 lo tho Cairo mid Fulton Itallroad.The proposition is ono of vital importunco to Cairo, and should enlist thu support of every citizen who has at heartthe well-being of tho city. For a full undorstnudino; of all benefits and advantage that will ensue from Its succes, andthe dleasdors that will follow Us defeat,assemble at Winter's Isiock on Saturday" ntijht at the hour of H o'cloclt.Hon. Wm. .7. AI.I.KN,S. 1'. Wiimsi.Kii, Kjhj.,I. T. LlNKHAKJoilii (J. Moiioan, J2sjwill uddruwi thu meeting. .Come and hear them, and assure eachether by your proaoncu that you are alivet'i the welfare of Cairo. 4July H.lH91)2t. . n tSJSfl JTJSilH,ho far as heard from, the world didi. 'it coin to a finale- on tho day set by tinadventUU.Th" negro jHHitmitster In Macon, Georgia, who wim. arrested forstoliur moneyfrom the Jotter. Iim ooufeaMd his fc'Ullt.An unknown man went into the Sriyorat Alton and wa4 drowned. IIo WuS KinLis way to St. Louis, and now he Is oim.A nmll niteut who Is only fco'venteenears of nut, hits lieeti apoliited for the.Viniville 5c Northwestern ralirouu.This Is below the nto required by law.The Chicago court .ian decided thati;jris company nave the rlht toforward inters acoompauyiu;: consignueiit in unstamped envelopes.Paper in Itwdon announce tho ai rivalrhere of Major Satnual Kdgar Hotijjtiton,who-e age l nineteen yoars, height thirty-oneInches and weight forty-onepound-'..Mr. Heverdy Johnson nys thut the'Itieches in parliament nhw that tireUrltlsh Kovurnmvut will not make anyfurther tonctlom. It will stand ttrmand bl. h- It time.The radical In Ohio iudurod Grant's"domestic policy," which menus, wo sup.I ose, the appointing of ids relativos toV) ollU-e and thu oduuatluu of his sou atthe cxpeus of the government.!There is u noi;ro woman living nearLowell's mill, on Duck river, Tuiin., who.-t 11 : ywr old, and who was able to worki p to last year- She ha a daughter whoii nlmottt iliwd from old nj;e.Lurry Jhttkr, aged 70, who lived neardaleville, N. V., was killed on the 8d Inst,ly a rani. Tho animal was put to deathI y sticks arid 'stouts In the hands of theuiraed friends of the dead man.A light occurred In a London policecourt room, during tho trial of Lord Carruu;t"ti for a?Mti!t and battery. It re.'tUlrvd tho pressure of twelve policemento quell tho disturbance.Kcv. John Long, of Thomasville, N.C.iw a-- attacked with apoplexy while preaching, ami whs tk'ii from the pulpit in a'-pe i-ch less condition. 11c died the following morning.The Detroit 'I'ostthinkH that our naval vcMieU, l we wouliniiavothein Inspireterror, should reeelvlflticli name an Choiira and Yellow -fevor,'i3usan It. AnthonyAnna Dickinson, A.:' are live hundred and seventyMnuh-, ..BOIitt'n'drciUirid ninety h'olmildtsi : ft o Schtaltta, nud a number iSmits1 1 1 1 1 -, Schmldlln, .Stultuis andSmyths, hi Cincinnati.11 ic i ity of Nashville, Teuii., is in quitalls.. 1U radical mayor haviug run uptho city ludobtodnusn to $730,00(j forwliKli he has no vouchers to show thecause of expmulfturtw a writ of injunction has bcuu soved upon his Honor t-imMr. J no. M. Bans appointed receiver.Of such U thoUiiigdom of radlcalhm.. . 1 1 i .i i i 'One of John V. Fornoy'M "two papers,both dally," ay "it iu to tho Radicalsthat this country is indobtod for tlio position it now holds among tho "nations oftho earth." Ah that position Is a verycontemptlblo one in the eyes of "tho nations of the earth," the country i underno particular obligation to IIadicilfcmand returns it no thank.Tho terms ot'Sonator Yate, of Illinois,Orlmosoflowa, Itoua of Kansas, MoCrooryor Kentucky, Foaseudbu of Maine, AV11son .f Massachusetts, XorUni of Miunosota, Thayer of Xphral;ii, Cragiu f NewHampshire, Cattoll of Now Jorsey, Authony of Ithodo Island, Fowlor of Tonne-,e, Williani.i of Oregon, and Howardof Michigan, expiro March I, 1871, andmost of the election for tholr successorsWill take place next year. This givesgreat importance io tho elections of nextfall for th.- Suae LeaN'atnrc-MONDA YASAi.fi. i.m'iiTA.T HWHtmyOl'Il IKTKIlMI..ATIO.V.1'ORTill Vltnl Point In lr lloolilril. (Wo Hliall not be ablo to address ourlocnl readers again before tho electionupon the Cairo & Fultou railroad proposition shall have been far adyauced' toM'ftrt a close. "re, thorcfore,' fool calledujion to cariicstly appeal to every friendor Cairo, to every voter interested in thofuturo growth and prosperity of tho city,to go to the polls and cast his ballot forth6 proposition. Wo regard It as umeasure fraught with consequences,the most important ever submittedto the determination, of our people.Tho votoAvill decide whether. Cairoshall secufe the Northeastern terminus 'ofof the Cairo & Fulton railroad, or lose It.it will decide whether Cairo shall, forail time, command the trade of the neighboring counties In southeast Missouri, orwhether those counties shall be driven tothe establishment of business relationswith other cities, which we may not buablo to'dlsturb'. -.It will decide whether Cairo shall,within tho next nix months an I perpetually thereafter, enjoy "direct communication with the great iron.reglons of MisMurl, with the city of St. X.ouls, tho numerous towns and village atid the richlyproductive country intermediate.Tho vote will determine whether thegreat southwest embracing tho southernjmrtion of'Mi"uri, itnd'n stretch of threehundred miles of the fertile territory ofcentral Arkansas, have its outlet to andthrough Cairo.It will decide whether Cairo shall bethe initial iwilnt of a line of a railway,penetrating the country drained by thoKed Itiver, and the HmitleHs pusturalregions of Texas from whence willcome the hooves that are to feed tho millions of tho Middle and Now KnglandStates.It will determine whether Cairo shallbecome the initial point of the greattrunk lino of the Pacific railway, beltingthe Republic of Mexico, and extendingto Mazatlau on thu Pixel lie coast.These aro matters or vital lmportnucoto Cairo, and we as firmly believe thatthey will bo determined by the vote on IMonday nexr, in wo bcllovo that that iday will dawn. 'To make the suUcrlptlou is to inaugurate a new and more prosperous era forCairo; to refuse to make it is to vote uponourselvn a condition of commercial languor, of bu-liiei-s sluggishness, that willkeop us at a perpetual fctaudatlll IfTtdo work more scriotH harm.No increase in our rato of taxation willensue; and the operation of the railroadlaw of the last legislature will provldous tho principal, quietly, surely, andalmost without-our knowledge. If wovote the sum, the taxes upon the property In oxcess of that oflSfc for tho periodof teuyears, will be. set aside to our credit to pay our railroad debts. If tho roadsto which we lend a helping hand operateupon Alexander county as they havo operated thu world over, after the lapse oftlve'years we shall have $100,000 In thostate treasury and at the expiration often years a half a million!If we vote that amount to the aid ofrailroads, tho money will bu found iu thotroasury subject to our order. If worefuse to vote It, our taxes will be nonethe less and tho money w ill bo expendedby tho stnto In meeting the salaries 'ofstate ntllolals, lu the support of Htato Institutions, In the furtherance of Chicagoimprovements or in thu enlargementand repair of tho Illinois CanalThink well upon those points. Divestyourselves of the great error that thoroad will como to Cairo an vhow. for assure as the world exifts, the $100,000 isthe only loadstone that will bring It toouTdoor GdHo tho, polls; vote for thoproposition, and In after times you willsay it was tho grandest act of your life.I-1. tn .lie I "r.utli .V II r. .!,.. rAs some of our city merchants got after us the other day because of tho twolocal notieos In our paper iu referenco totho shoe-fa'ctory, and stated that it wasa bad move towards gaining tho goodwill of other dealers, wo heieby tenderto eacli and every one of them the uso'ofour columns upon tho baino terms enjoyod by Mu,strs. . MeKenzio, .Quill (Jo.These gentlemen pay for what they get.If they cliooe to advertise that thoy cansell better gpods for less money thanany other establishment in town, and noono attempts to deny it, it Is none of ourbusiness. Wo shailihoerlftfn to publishany advcrUaomenfcwliiclu they or anyone else may favqrjtowltli. JThe business loealsftvo 'publish alwaysexcites tho IresJmcbodiNot long agowo "pulled" a" busHiepi '-house to thoamount of eight "doUarJifevotlng nearlyit third of a column to tho subject. Wopresented our bill nhd received the moneywith tho thaiksof ourpatrou. Twentyfour hours had not elnpn-d before wowere approached by as many as a halfdoi:on b.wlnc-s m,oii to know tho reasonwhy wo never "pulled" them; thoy hadttlwnjj. talu a the pai ir uinl paid for it,and wero an much entitled to such favors as anybody. "Wo told tlieso ge'ritlcmcn it would aflbrd us tho utmostpleasure to notico them in tho sameway; wo would thank them for tho privilege of doing so. This struck them t axvery clover iu us; but when we addedthat we had received eight dollars forthe "puff"" In question, mid should exactthu same amount from them for a likeservice, tho subject nil at onco assumedan odious nature, and milcklygavo placo to "tho weather" or "tho condition of the crops."AVo do no gratuitous personal "puf-fing unless it'is in thTlTitcrebt of morality, education or charity. Juslnosslocals form ono of the chief Hourcosour ofIncome, and to abandon it would be tothrow nwuy $500 to .I,O0P per year anItem iu tho cash line that ho Cairo papercan afford to lose. 'Wo will, thcrcfon , for the dozenthtime, perllupi), repent thu nssuranco thatwe exact a rcasotable compensation' fornil local' notices in our paper aimed toforward tho uusineV or schemes of Individuals. Our columns ure open to all,and our terms aro easy; audi wo ,a.yuroour busincjs and professional nicnburmechanjes and manufacturers that they.shali'havu at any and nil times as muchof our space iw tln.-y ore willing to payfor.M'HtK ltAIIVAYS.A New Iuciitlun i'l-rltit C'nmrjfil OwrWire.A railway without cuttings, embankments, tunnels, viaducts or bridged, nomatter how hilly the'eountry to hS traversed Is tho definition given byMIcrapathV JotirnaP of au Inventionnow in use in Leicestershire, and a working model of which may bo seen inGresliom fltrce't, 13.' O. The wire trainway provides a sluiple and cheap substitute lor a line of rajjsi und is of great service where, fruin thescarcity or intermittent character of the tralllc, or the engineering dltllcultiesuf the ground to begotover, It Is either not expedient or impossible to go through tho expenslvo process of forming u local rallwaj. For thowlrespaus over and evades obstacles iuplaco of burrowing under or levellingthem, and will perform its task as easilyalong a rugged tract of country us on ttasmoothest road. The experiment beingnow prosecuted, with completesuccess between some Iiolcestershlrostoue luarries and a railway station, three miles uisiani, consists oran endless wlro rope, supported on ascries of pullics cairlcd by substantialposts, which aro ordinarily about onehundred and fifty foot apart, but the interval between which may bo greatly extended, as Is shown In one case, wherethe pau from post to past is six hundredfeet. One of tho euds of tills ropo pasacsround a Fowlor's clip-drum, worked by aportable steam engine, and tills drivesthe ropo at a speed of six miles an hour.Boxes are hung on the rope at tho loadlug end near the quarries by a pendantwhich is Ingeniously arranged to preservea. perfect equilibrium, and at the sametime to pass without hindrance over thusupports. Each of these boxes carriesone hundred weight of stone, and thudelivery is at tho rato of two hundredboxes, or ten tons per hour, for the threemiles distance.Already wlro traJnwnys of tho Leces-tershiru model are iu course of erection iiu France, Italy and Spain. Negotla- 1Hons arc on foot, too, between thu Turk- Iisli government und the engineers here,and it is not improbable that this gene- Iration may "oe goods carriod by wlro ascommonly as messages. The iraiuway, IJs indeed, not unlike an exceedingly!ttouteleclvio telegraph ;aud there is some-thing almost droll in the night of a regi- 'inent of wclMadcu trucks or boxes pass- !ing gravely along It at stilted intervals,andat a regularnace, much asif they were 'at lerlal drill- The most important pplutIn Mr. llodgaou'a Invention is ids iiath- ;od of pasting thu point of support, ,whluh consists in so curving the frame ufthe truck or box as to make the centre of igravity comu under tho rope. So adinl- jrably is tills managed that some of ourleading onglugeid have been discu$ing (quite rucontly tho possibility of of con-,struotlug a stout wire trainway between ,Dover and Calais, which should be sup- ,ported from a lino or pillars sunk in midocean, and along which passengers couldbo conveyed. 'Thu cost would be comparatively small, and suspuiuory truiuscould, it is argued, ibo dlsputibed acrosstho channel without dllllcuWy or dangur,It should bo stated that where heavyloads uuihO necessarily bu carried: a pairof stationary supporting ropes, with anendless running ropo for tho motivepower, are employed, and that by thesemeans as many as a thousand tons perdayean bo easily conveyed. The tostof erecting these trainway In Knglaud,and of supplying motive power and rolling stock, is from i-oO a mile fur carryingtlfty tons a day, iu boxes holding half ahundred weight each, to tl,5Loa mile to ,ono of tho double-n ps lines, to tarry1,000 tons a day, in boxes or trucks holding six hundred weight each. For alldistrlots where there is tradlc, but whereit would not pay to construct a railway,tho wire trainway is particularly applicable, and, a will readily bo understood,Khere ever there is a standing room forposts, there a lino can be erected. A recent application from traders iu copperfor putting up ono for them which shouldi mi through an African forest, and overau African Jungle down to the const,Illustrate the varlod circumstances undvr which tho now system of transportmay bo applied.-CAIRO WKUICM IHI.I.r.TI..'Krum UioCci .ii .a JL.s.4i h.'J, U, Oberly A- Co. arc now Issuing aweekly in connection with the CairoKveulng 'Bulletin it is a good sizedeight pago paper, and typographically itis a modol of neatness; and or course itis conducted with editorial ability. It isnot axactly a Kontucky paper, but Jt Isas noar home nssomo of those publishedin Kentucky, and ns orthodox on democracy as can bo found anywhere. Wecommend it to tho patronago of thosedc.irlngtotako a first class newspaperoutside of tho state.THE niASrOND IJATjKK.'ov-l .Mode or (,'oiirciillii a Theft A.Struugi hlnry.Trltal! from tlicl'rtnch rorUieKociiMlorl'nlnii.iA sou of "La Pcrlldo Albion," drosseuwith torupulous care, and sporting thoinevitable llery-hiied whiskers of dogear pattern thator the-lust thirty or fortyyhars luivu formed tho distinguishingfacial ornament of the malo Inhabitantsuf ISritish Isles, walked into ono of'thoprincipal Jewelry shops or Palmcro, a fewweeks ago, and Iu spltf of tho wretchedItalian in which he delivered himself,managed to make known his viesire of looklug over tho largo assortment of iremand prei'loiis stones that glistened in thewindows ami show-can', with a view,lie explained, to purchasing tho handsomest he could select for a set lie Intended to order. ' ".Thuijuwelcr, whom this request plunged Into cfstacy of Joy.' showed, as muybe imagined, 'great alacrity in placingbefore his distinguished customer thomost beautiful pearls ami the purest diamonds ho pouched. But tho Englishman could Hud nothing to suit ids fastidious taste. It was not the prices he murmured at; on the contrary, lie expresseda willingness to pay moat liberally forhis purchase, provided lie was successful iu procuring anything lie might consider worthy of a placo in tho princelygift which, lie allowed It to bo inferred,was intended as a surprise to some darkeyed .SIclIlun beauty. Nothing dlsoouraged by the fault-finding propensities orthe magnificent foreigner, the worthytradesman, who was all smiles and bowcontinued his researches, literally rumuging and ransacking his npaclous storofrom top to bottom, in his eflort to do Justice to himself by proving ids establishment to be second to none in tho beauty,slzoaud variety of the prccloin metals itcontained. Finally, after a clone examination of tho numbcrlcs diamonds, ruble-,pearls, emeralds, turquoises midamethysts, that lay licapcu upon thucounter, and a lengthy discussion of theirqualltits and defects, thu distinguishedlooKing foreigner succteueu iu uuoiugunumber that met with Ids unqualifiedapproval, and after having them putaside, gave the requisite directions forthe maui-.t r iu which he wished to havethem set.The Jeweler, rejoiced at the happy termination of so weighty a matter, cet towork gathering up ills valued treasuresand replacing them Iu their caskets, continuing all the whilu the conversationwith Ids mncnlllceut natron. A lie wasengaged in this occupation, ids eye happened to fall upon a small box filled withdiamonds, when hu missed a large brilliant which ho had held in his hand butu moment before. "My lord," he exclaimed, struck witli a sudden suspicion,"I Just now showed you a diamond ofgreat value. You rember it, do you not?Well, It ha disappeared!""What is that to me?" sold the Englishman. "It is tills much, that you will notleave hero till I have found it." ,"As fur that I am iu no hurry rejoinedtho Englishman with great composure."You may search mo if you like."The Jeweler while continuing to lookfor his diamond, whispered a word iu thoear of ono of ills clerks, who started oil'In great haite and returned iu a fewmoments, followed by a police inspectorand two patrolmen. Upon their arrival,thu diamond being unfouud. thu Jewelerdenounced "milord" us having stolen It.Tho Englishman indignantly deniedthe elmrge, but, as he ittd, to place thematter beyond all doubt, hu begged thattl.e inspector would search ins clonicsand pqr?on from head to foot, whicji thuoniour proceeded to do without furtherceremony. Whilu this operation wasgoing on. however, the Englishman, intaking oil' Jiiifii.it, madu u ..violent nmovement that lio dropped one slde'ofIds whiskers."All, ha 1 my Uno follow, thnt'A yourgame, J. if.'" said thu inspector: "1 understand you now. Come; for your5 owyisake, mako a clean breast of it, and tollus what. vou took ami where you've putIt, Tor 1 hardly suppofco you contented5 ""I have taken no'lllillg.'ifi'id lfave'ifotlVIng to toll you. 1 um at ilborty to wearfalse whiskers if I choose, and It Is nobody's business whoter I do or nut."proved fruitless, the uupoctpruQtcrmlnedto hold nhd'hrlfon In custody, andmarchod off with him to tho prufenturoof police, on the way tp vh'leli it so happened that they passed by an apothecary's. Till-. clretunsUnees, apparentlytoo trivial 'and unimportant to be mentlpiiod, curved t clear up .tho myatery,forH undonhtedly gave birth tS thTfellotons inspiration thut pruclaims thoshrewd Inspector In whose brain it originated. They readied the prefecture, where thoEnglishman wan pieced In a room undertho surveillance of two guards. In thocoiirt-e of a halt hour tho nspector madohis appearance and after motioning totho guards to withdraw, soated hlin&prand enterud into friendly" coven-atlouwith i ho Englishman, to whom hu expressed tho regret 'ho feu at linivVrig beencompelled by his duty to place him atlids temporary inconvenience, but lieUoub'cd not that In tho hbsdhce of anyproof of his guilt, tho magistrate beforewhom ho w;ouhl havo to appear he.v.day would order him to bo sot at liberty.Iu this vlow tho Uiigllshman fully concurred. A thoy wero conversing thohor opened au'i an attendant ciaio inbearing a tray ladoiied with refit hmonts, among which wero two glasses ofbeer. One of them th olllcer handed totho unsuspecting foreigner who, knockng his glass against that of his host Intruo British style, quailed Us content oil'at ono draught.Tho mixture was not slow In producingf" "licet, and the fact wnn revealed that"Miford" had swallowed bosldo.r the diamond that was missing, three other dlainonds of tho purest water, four pearlsand a largo turquoise, reprinting n total value or from 20,000 l5U'25,000.The Washington correspondent of theNew York 'flerald' says: Senator Cameron is hero for the purpose, it Is understood, of protesting against tho appointmentof JlenJamln II. Urowster, of Pennsylvania, to a placo In tho Cabinet. Camcron had an Interview with tho Presidentto-day on tho subject, with whnt successis not known. Urowster and Cameronwere formerly old friends, but have lately quarreled, and Cameron 1 auxlous tokeep Itrowstor out of tho cabinet.GAS FITTERS0(HAMiK OF FIItM.c. r. vi:.nnii oo.,1Uhj imrvha-H the entire Hoek amlfliwui. .AOJ. htrmcyT, Mr pri-pured to Uo alt bVi ..:(J a s a u d S t c a in P 1 1 1 1 n gIn anvninn'l w.irl.ninnliko iiMniipr. Wourr a: .jxtre.l to rrilr nil kirtiN ofOn (Ulnrw, nn.l I - r.ri'iof uroiidiignnd (riMinicniiiMn Hum inVvryiHirlionlar n imhI n ntr. Tliotit Itnvlnr mmh fxturn, will j.Uuf.0 KOuuiuiJll iti,fiwiion tjuiunntoot In . h. .'. V, VU.MJfiK,Hm9.Ur K. K Mt'ttltirGROCERIES. BOAT STORES, ETC.JOS. MENDHL,-iH alcr u-raiull.v ;rn rrli', I'roi Islmit, Vccetiiltit-.i:tr., ):ic.A Ur(?p mipplr of l'ajr nrocfrlc. Cann'l Kin.'-t" , alwuyit im lumi. Ilvrrlliing pur and frMliS. i:. It ill. OK WASHINGTON AV. AND TKNT1I - .aim IfP VINCENT,1iiT in (fO-'-nri, .im, Ilatr I'fl, I-'.l.'r."Jian, (cnitul.in iulk, iiUaiA on Imiid. Corner KighlhOlii" I.'-m q. t'liiro Illlnotn. inytsl'GI). "WILLIAMSON,w ii o i: s .v I 1: ti it o c 1: u .ritUhlTK AM) COMMISSIONovc s n. o rr a w t ,V. 7G Ohio Levee,Cairo, III.Hpix'mUttention tir(iiloL(mi)iitii. iit nnl fi.i neBROOM FACTORY.c1AIHO IIKOOM MANUFACTORYw. r. 3iki:k a mtoTiiuit,Il.it iiw trf.--ti a tli...r urruuvmrnl far Um iui....tur of Iirootnii in l!u it v. r now trnir I : ionUra 11 uXjow 3?riooA tin- in-qMtiii ..nr.j.im, i, i pun l.u-i x ..r jlir.Ord en left nt lliodnn- uf . P. Williamwn. Ts 0: jl.fxvt; or nt IliaMaiiiiractoi'', I'oiirtrriith klrcvt, lirlttrrnAValimt mill Ctiliir,Will Lv )ironill) iiltiiiilc-il Xu,Ortlrr .)' iii.i il vl.uul'l i. ft.,lif-M-.t toW. V. M'KKK illlio.1. O. II01 -131.Iimlf.lii (;iin. lllni.. .WANTS.WA.V'l'KD-Alminl- r Ciainiy OtOara, ui ni -anilL'ltV Slirilk ht Ci. Hit. un llid ili.llurVilifU "f I.iiinU-r u4 lluil'l. rn' MwJi rwilt.hnllll W. W. TIIOKNTO.N.lOIt ItEN'IIfOlt lti;. T.-Th i4ftp im ttia Mwonil flro-it. r M lltr .v M li. 'n.4luin i.i , i.i r-.i n.Liu.-. .Vl'l'l.i t 1 1 i .'J.IUi . Ui- i1710U UUM'--Iiirw ...ai.... i-u Kifbili. N ..1 aivl wiiii-iiiS, tirH ir-. !iKlt .jyliii i.ltKKN . 1 1. U HUT. Ati't.FOR SALE.17OU S I.K, CIIU.VP Xotf l-.f-A.' 'iu tJ." Lin " . . I. i. iltiti((t.B)rti-Mtlli la.iliI.Biart.-Mtl Inmiu-m.lltKN 4 VIl-llliKT. AtlV.rSIGN AND ORMAMEMTAL PAINTNGf A iff. L. TIIOM v "SKJN AX1 0KNAML.MAL PAlXTLlt,.. ku.-iiu 11'. ..I Hi." dty N'tufosal tt il l.flu, .:i 'lliiu LwM,Olx-o. CD I IN.itouSitrTAILOR.QOKN KLIL'H IIOYI.K.1.10 tJO.MJIHHCI.VI. avkxuis,Bt'..M a lUyili' in. bi"t n-l Hiioa H.i.A'KO, H.1.IN01-.ygCiiiai..tf -iou aoluutyp tit-a. timi'Mir1AINT1SHS MATI5ltIAL&B.V. PAHKKH.Wll'U I.RA1), ?IN't: AXI) OILS,WINDOW WO PUTTYm'wii wuit iiuit wiititottMluiiu.0.. QHJO I, Li . ...GAWO, III.JOSEPH s a '!! HROTHKK,: iiw .Cliol, t'.i'i.U: (irjvi,t-,. PruUsioiis,Hutu t. t'uuln .. A I'ui'lnblrN,